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thedrifter
06-15-09, 05:43 AM
U.S. has changed, not legacy of John Brown
By Vicki Smith - The Associated Press
Posted : Sunday Jun 14, 2009 11:07:55 EDT

HARPERS FERRY, W.Va. — A century and a half later, Americans still don’t know quite what to think of John Brown, a fervent abolitionist who launched a bloody attack meant to take down slavery.

Certainly, he aimed to be a hero. He believed his plan was the necessary means to a righteous end: Storm a federal arsenal, seize thousands of weapons, arm a gathering guerrilla force and start the revolution that would end the morally reprehensible but perfectly legal institution.

Yet the first casualty of his 1859 raid on Harpers Ferry was a free black man, a baggage handler who bled to death on the street while Brown’s raiders grabbed hostages and holed up at a fire engine house. Within 48 hours, Brown’s rebellion was dead, along with at least four civilians, 10 raiders and a U.S. Marine who helped retake the building.

Brown’s methods have been debated ever since, the grandiosity of his plot and his willingness to kill or be killed a timeless fascination. This year, the National Park Service has declared that his raid was the opening salvo in the country’s brutal Civil War, with sesquicentennial commemorations beginning in West Virginia.

But in 1959, as America began to contemplate the centennial of the War Between the States, Brown was largely left out of the discussion.

Segregation of schools and public lynchings still made headlines that year, and many white Southerners feared civil rights activists would use tales of the raid to agitate. Blacks feared being marginalized, or worse. And so John Brown was pushed aside.

“John Brown was, in effect, a terrorist — whether you agree that what he was doing was right or not,” said Gerry Gaumer, spokesman for the Park Service in Washington, D.C. “There are people in the Taliban who believe what they’re doing is right. Can you separate John Brown from what’s going on in Iraq or Iran or Pakistan or Afghanistan?

“They fervently believe what they’re doing is right,” he says. “But is there a better way?”
Retracing Brown’s steps

This month, the Park Service is offering walking tours that retrace Brown’s footsteps through the picturesque town at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers. Descendants of raiders, soldiers and townspeople will gather in August, then return for the Oct. 16 anniversary to explain their ancestors’ roles.

Had his own been among the bodies in 1859, Brown might have remained a bit player in the larger drama of the war. But that was not his fate. On trial for treason, murder and inciting a rebellion, he refused to apologize and declared the fight for freedom sanctioned by God and the Bible.

Swiftly convicted and executed, he became a potent and enduring symbol — to the North, a heroic martyr willing to die for equality; to the South, a lunatic killer attacking a way of life. And so he remained for a century or more, a complicated man often dismissed with simplistic labels.

Later, people began to talk more openly about slavery and the roles that blacks and other racial and social groups had played in the nation’s defining conflict.

Slowly, historian Jean Libby said, historians stopped dismissing Brown as a madman and began to put him in the context of his times, times when — to the undying outrage of Brown and his wealthy supporters — courts ruled that black people were not citizens but property of whites.

Textbook writers, Libby said, gradually began to acknowledge that slaves had come from Africa with culture and history of their own, in said of neither handlers nor teachers.

“Now slavery is portrayed differently,” she said, “and so is John Brown.”
‘Ahead of his time’

Brown, a Connecticut native, had despised slavery since he was a boy and witnessed a slave being beaten. He spent months plotting to seize 100,000 weapons in what was then Virginia, retreat into the mountains and begin a guerrilla war with slaves who would join him, emboldened by his success.

“He was so ahead of his time,” said Alice Keesey Mecoy, who discovered she was Brown’s great-great-great granddaughter in 1976.

Libby had come to Mecoy’s grandmother, asking to photograph the family. Mecoy found the story “kind of cool,” but she was 16. Only after her own children had left home did she grow so interested as to make her ancestor’s life her full-time research project. This fall, the 49-year-old former accountant and office manager from Allen, Texas, is presenting a paper in Harpers Ferry on the women surrounding Brown. A book is in the works.

“He wasn’t only against slavery. He was for equality of all people, men and women, any color, any religion. He firmly felt everyone was equal,” she said. “And that was such a radical thought for the time.”

Brown became part of the popular culture of his times, and that legacy endures: An American reggae band uses the song as its name and Brown’s likeness on its album covers. In 2007, a rare daguerreotype of Brown sold for $97,750 at a Cincinnati auction.

While many defend Brown’s attack on Harpers Ferry, few label the slaughter of five pro-slavery leaders in Kansas three years before as anything but premeditated murder. Brown’s raiding party on Pottawatomie Creek hacked the men to death with swords in an execution that University of Maryland professor Martin Gordon calls “probably the most misunderstood event of his career.”

“Why did he use swords? Not because he’s a barbarian, but because he didn’t want anyone to hear what he was doing. Rifle fire would wake up the town,” said Gordon, president of the Council of America’s Military Past.

“This was a very selective act of terrorism, moral justice, take your pick. Criminal action, take your pick,” Gordon said. “But he wanted to teach the pro-slavery element in Kansas a lesson, so he picked five of their leaders, pulled them out of their house and killed them as silently as he could.”

In his own death, Brown became what the pro-slavery New York Journal of Commerce predicted when it published an editorial urging that he be imprisoned rather than hanged for his crimes.

“Monsters are hydra-headed, and decapitation only quickens vitality, and power of reproduction,” the newspaper warned.

Escaped slave and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, who had tried to talk Brown out of his doomed raid, acknowledged its importance decades later, in an 1881 speech in Harpers Ferry.

“Until this blow was struck, the prospect for freedom was dim, shadowy and uncertain. The irrepressible conflict was one of words, votes and compromises,” he said. “When John Brown stretched forth his arm the sky was cleared. The time for compromises was gone — the armed hosts of freedom stood face to face over the chasm of a broken Union — and the clash of arms was at hand.”

Ellie

thedrifter
06-15-09, 05:45 AM
John Brown’s fearsome pikes still hold fascination
By David Dishneau - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Jun 12, 2009 14:59:55 EDT

DARGAN, Md. — The spears that John Brown ordered for his abolitionist army were fearsome, primitive things. Nearly 7 feet long, the pikes had 10-inch steel blades made for slashing and impaling those who resisted the slave rebellion Brown envisioned.

But the uprising didn’t come, and the nearly 1,000 pikes Brown purchased from a Connecticut blacksmith and stockpiled at a Maryland farm a few miles from the U.S. arsenal at Harpers Ferry, W.Va., were never used for their intended purpose.

Instead, after Brown’s ill-fated raid on the arsenal Oct. 16, 1859, many pikes were seized as souvenirs and today command high prices. One bearing the serial number 846 was sold through Dallas-based Heritage Auction Galleries in 2007 for $13,000.

Brown’s capture and execution for treason foiled his plan to hand out pikes to freed slaves and ignited passions on both sides of the slavery divide. Northern abolitionists considered him a martyr; secessionist fire-eaters in the South raised the John Brown pikes as symbols of Northern aggression in the run-up to the Civil War.

“There wasn’t anything you could put in front of Southern aristocracy that was more frightening than a slave revolt. They feared that more than anything,” said Dennis Lowe, who oversees Civil War material at Heritage Auction Galleries.
Pikes distributed to governors

Virginian Edmund Ruffin, a pro-slavery extremist, acquired a number of pikes from Col. Alfred W, Barbour, superintendent of the federal arsenal, and arranged with Alabama Sen. Clement C. Clay to have them sent to the governors of the slave-holding states.

To the handle of each pike, Ruffin pasted a label: “Sample of the favors designed for us by our Northern Brethren.” He asked that the weapons be conspicuously displayed, preferably at the statehouse.

The historical record is hazy on whether any pikes were showcased. But Ruffin caused a stir by writing an editorial promoting his idea for the Examiner newspaper in Richmond, Va., said Eric H. Walther, a University of Houston historian and author of “The Fire-Eaters.”

Ruffin also carried a pike with him to Washington to garner support for the gimmick, historians said.

“It became a huge media event: ‘Come see the John Brown pike,’ ” said Dennis Frye, chief historian at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. “His wish was to create fear and terror of slave insurrection.”

Frye said the anxiety whipped up by secessionists such as Ruffin accelerated the formation of Southern militias and helped the Confederacy grow strong enough to defeat Union forces in the war’s first battle at Fort Sumter, S.C., on April 12, 1861. Ruffin was there.
Rarely seen today

Surviving pikes are rarities, Lowe said. He said some were deliberately broken and used as knives and many others simply disappeared.

“If you see one of these every three or four years, it’s unusual. That tells me a bunch of them were burned or destroyed. Otherwise, you’d see more of them,” Lowe said.

Institutions with at least one intact pike — two is a lot — include Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, the Smithsonian Institution, the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Va., and the Kansas Museum of History. Brown led armed attacks against pro-slavery groups in Kansas before moving east.

Donald R. Tharpe, a private collector in Warrenton, Va., who owned the pike auctioned in 2007, said holding such relics brings history alive.

“It’s a thrill because this is firsthand evidence of the scene at the time,” Tharpe said. “I can just in my mind’s eye visualize the whole incident.”

Harpers Ferry National Monument on June 29, 1944.

http://www.nps.gov/hafe/historyculture/john-brown.htm

Ellie

thedrifter
06-15-09, 05:46 AM
• The Kennedy Farmhouse

http://www.johnbrown.org/story.htm


• Quad-State Sesquicentennial Committee

http://www.johnbrownraid.org/index.php

Ellie